
Conor McGrath
This month, we’re proud to feature Conor McGrath—one of our own team members and a collector whose story is deeply rooted in Boston sports, 90s basketball, and the moments that stay with you long after the game ends.
Conor’s collection is built on more than players and cardboard. It’s tied to identity, memory, and the emotional imprint that sports can leave behind. Growing up just outside of Boston, sports weren’t just part of the culture—they were the culture. The teams, the heartbreak, the history, and the expectations were always there.
And in the 1990s, there was plenty of heartbreak to go around. For Boston fans, it was a difficult era. The Celtics were rebuilding and still reeling from devastating losses. The Red Sox couldn’t quite get over the hump. The Patriots were a long way from becoming the dynasty people now associate with New England sports. It was a frustrating stretch for the city—but like so many kids growing up during that time, Conor found something bigger through basketball.
That’s where the connection really took hold. Like many collectors of that era, he was drawn in by the stars who felt larger than life. Jordan. Shaq. The rise of 90s basketball. The visual energy of the hobby itself. Cards like Beam Team didn’t just stand out—they stuck. And from there, the collection kept growing.
As the decade moved forward, so did the players who shaped his PC. The legendary draft classes from 1996 through 1998 left a huge imprint on Conor’s collecting identity. Kobe Bryant, Allen Iverson, Ray Allen, Tim Duncan, Vince Carter, Dirk Nowitzki, Paul Pierce—so many of the players who defined that era still anchor his collection today. That stretch of basketball helped shape not just what he collected, but why he connected to it in the first place.
But according to Conor, the most meaningful item in his collection isn’t a card at all. It’s a jacket. A black and yellow Boston Marathon volunteer jacket from 2013—his first year volunteering at the race, and a year the city will never forget. The events of that day left a lasting impact, but what stayed with him just as deeply was what came after: the resilience, unity, and compassion that poured out of Boston and the broader running community in response. That spirit carried into sports in a way that felt impossible to ignore.
When the Red Sox won the 2013 World Series, it wasn’t just another championship. To Conor, it felt like something more. Bigger, even, than 2004. It felt like a city reclaiming itself. A reminder of what people can do when they come together after pain, and a moment that captured Boston’s grit, heart, and resilience in real time. That’s what the jacket represents.
Today, Conor’s collection tells a layered story—one about growing up around Boston sports, falling in love with 90s basketball, and holding onto the moments that meant something deeper than the scoreboard. It’s a reminder that collecting isn’t just about what you own. It’s about what it represents, and the memories it helps you carry forward.
Conor leaves us with a reminder that feels especially fitting: the most meaningful pieces in a collection aren’t always the rarest or most valuable. Sometimes they’re the ones that hold the most story.

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Collect With Intention. Not Compulsion.